DiBiasio v. DiFazio

239 A.2d 719, 103 R.I. 565, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 830
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 18, 1968
Docket130-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 239 A.2d 719 (DiBiasio v. DiFazio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiBiasio v. DiFazio, 239 A.2d 719, 103 R.I. 565, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 830 (R.I. 1968).

Opinion

*566 Roberts, C. J.

This is a bill in equity 1 for specific performance of an agreement for the sale of land entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant John DiFazio, hereinafter referred to as John. The cause was heard by a justice of the superior court sitting in equity, who thereafter entered judgment denying and dismissing the bill of complaint. The plaintiff is in this court prosecuting his appeal from that judgment.

*567 The record discloses that Rose DiFazio, mother of John, was the owner of a tract of land comprising four house lots in the city of Cranston. Title to three of these lots she held in joint tenancy with her son John, while title to the fourth lot was in her alone. It is not disputed that on January 4, 1961, plaintiff conferred with John, who was working in a garage on Plainfield Pike. Neither is it disputed that an agreement for the purchase of the four lots was entered into by plaintiff and John and that plaintiff made a down payment of $300. There was introduced into evidence a receipt for this down payment which reads: “I received of Mr. Pasco M. DiBiasio a deposit of $300.00, For purchase of four lots of land on Garrison St., Cranston, R. I. (Lot #2839, 2840, 2841, 2842). For the total amount of $3865.00. This land will be sold with a clear Title Guarantee Policy. Total balance $3565.00.”

The receipt bears the signature of John and the purported signature of the defendant mother. The testimony is in sharp conflict as to whether defendant mother in fact signed the receipt. John testified that he had signed both his name and his mother’s name to the receipt at the garage in the presence of plaintiff and has some corroborating testimony to this effect. On the other hand, plaintiff testified that John left the garage ostensibly to get his mother’s signature, and some 20 minutes later he returned with the purported signature of defendant mother and his own signature appearing on the receipt.

The trial justice found that John had signed defendant mother’s name but was without authority to do so and that defendant mother had at no subsequent time ratified his action. The trial justice, conceding that the evidence on the issue was close, said: “But there is a burden of proof on the part of the plaintiff either to show that John had authority when he signed her name that day at the garage, or in the house, or at a later time that she ratified this sale; *568 and it doesn’t seem to me that I can quite find that the plaintiff has done this.” He then denied and dismissed the bill of complaint. We find no error here, for it is entirely consistent with the settled rule that one seeking specific performance of an agreement has the burden of establishing by clear and convincing evidence the propriety of the grant thereof by the court. Reed v. Rathbun, 91 R. I. 421, 164 A.2d 387.

Such findings by a trial justice sitting in equity will not be disturbed by this court on appeal unless shown to be clearly wrong. City of Warwick v. Del Bonis Sand & Gravel Co., 99 R. I. 537, 209 A.2d 227. An examination of the record discloses that the trial justice made an exhaustive analysis of the testimony bearing on the issues here and based thereon reached conclusions of fact that are entirely reasonable. In so doing, in our opinion, he neither overlooked nor misconceived any evidence, and, therefore, we cannot say that he was clearly wrong.

Specific performance is not a matter of right but rests entirely upon the sound discretion of the chancellor. Finkelstein v. Tateosian, 77 R. I. 310, 75 A.2d 29; Ball v. Milliken, 31 R. I. 36, 76 Atl. 789. In the instant case, the trial justice having found lack of authority in John to enter into the agreement and lack of ratification thereof by defendant mother, to have granted specific performance would have been a clear abuse of sound judicial discretion. We find no error in the trial justice’s denial of the bill for specific performance.

In this court plaintiff argued that the trial justice found that John had been authorized by his mother to sell her interest in the three lots held in joint tenancy and, therefore, he had authority to convey three of the four lots. On this basis he argued that the trial justice, having so found, erred in not decreeing partial specific performance with respect to the three lots. Were we to concede that the trial *569 justice had found that John possessed authority to sell the three lots, the question might well arise as to whether partial specific performance in the circumstances should be ordered.

There is considerable confusion among the authorities as to those situations in which it would be appropriate to decree partial specific performance. In Morris v. Wilson, 187 Md. 217, 225, 49 A.2d 458, 461, the court noted: “The principle as to partial specific performance, with abatement, invoked by plaintiff, has been recognized by Lord Nottingham 250 years ago (Cleaton v. Gower, Finch 164) and ip many subsequent English and American cases. In the application of the principle, lines have not been sharply drawn, and it would not be easy to reconcile all the English or the American cases.”

However, the view which seems to have behind it a substantial weight of authority, is stated in Merritz v. Circelli, 361 Pa. 239, 64 A.2d 796. In that case the court pointed out that the high court of chancery in England as early as the seventeenth century was decreeing specific performance of agreements with an allowance of compensation to the plaintiff because of the defendant’s inability fully to carry out his contract. The court went on to say: “The practice thus born has, become so generally adopted that it is now a commonplace doctrine in equity jurisprudence, it being firmly established that, where it is not in the power of a vendor to make title to all that he has covenanted to convey, the vendee has the right to take what the vendor can give with an allowance out of the purchase money for the deficiency * * *. Only in cases where there is a defect in the vendor’s title or a deficiency in the quantity of the land to be conveyed does the doctrine of specific performance with an abatement prevail; where there is merely a claim based upon a representation collateral to the contract the *570 only remedy available to the vendee is rescission or the recovery of damages at law.”

It would appear that this court recognized and followed this doctrine in Najarian v. Boyajian, 48 R. I. 213, 136 Atl.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Properties v. Campo
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2007
Kooloian v. Suburban Land Co.
873 A.2d 95 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2005)
Morelli v. Newport Onshore
656 A.2d 627 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1995)
Eastern Motor Inns, Inc. v. Ricci
565 A.2d 1265 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1989)
Sawyer v. Firestone
513 A.2d 36 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1986)
King v. Knibb
447 A.2d 1143 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1982)
Chapman v. Vendresca
426 A.2d 262 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1981)
Ucci v. Mancini
344 A.2d 367 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 A.2d 719, 103 R.I. 565, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dibiasio-v-difazio-ri-1968.